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Women are closing the education gap with men, but a global study of gender equality shows these advances are failing to bring equal access to quality jobs and government representation.

The study, which explored decades of data from more than 150 countries, finds that women have reached 91 percent of the education that men have — but only 70 percent of their rate of employment, and just 25 percent of political representation.

The findings challenge the assumption that education — a hallmark of international development efforts — translates into equal access to high-paying jobs. The study suggests that policy action is needed to ensure women can equally earn a fair living.

According to study author Stephanie Seguino, a University of Vermont economist, the belief that markets will fix these gaps fails to account for centuries-old gender norms and male hierarchies that education alone can’t change.

“Clearly, education alone is not enough to solve this problem,” says Seguino, whose study is published in the Journal of African Development. “We need concrete policy tools to break down gender barriers, because the market’s ‘invisible hand’ is not working.”

The study offers two key reasons for women’s lower employment and income: greater exclusion from high-paying jobs, and a disproportionate amount of unpaid household work, including care for children and aging parents.

Seguino says policy changes are needed to level the playing field, including paid parental leave, affordable daycare — and potentially even gender quotas.

Gender gap worst in work and politics

For the study, Seguino analyzed global data from the World Bank, the International Labor Organization and other key sources from 1990-2010.

The greatest progress towards gender equality has been made in education and life expectancy. Globally, women’s total years of education is now 91 percent of men’s. In more than half the world’s countries, female education rates are now similar — or greater — than men, up from 33 percent in 1990.

Despite these gains, women’s employment rates are 30 percent lower than men’s — even less in some regions of Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa. The study also finds that women face rising job segregation. The share of women employed in the relatively high-paying industrial sector compared to men, has dropped 20 percentage points since 1990.

“Equal employment is crucial,” says Seguino, a researcher in UVM’s Gund Institute for Ecological Economics and College of Arts and Sciences. “Without equal access to quality work, women are vulnerable and disempowered. Moreover, their lower job status perpetuates the stereotype of men as the breadwinners of society.”

The gender gap remains widest in political representation, Seguino finds. While political representation for women has increased compared to men — from 14 percent in 1990, measured in government seats — they still remain woefully under represented at 25 percent, the study finds. Legislative bodies in some nations, including Haiti and Qatar, still have no female members.

“Without women, governments are more likely to spend taxpayer money in ways that disproportionately benefit men — or at least ignore the extra burdens on women,” Seguino adds. “We need women in government to ensure their life conditions and needs are reflected in these policy and funding decisions.”

She cites Canada’s recent gender quota, which increased female government representation to 50 percent overnight, as example for how policy can improve gender equality.

Countries such as Rwanda have also adopted political gender quotas, and Norway requires equitable representation of women on corporate boards.

Less than 77 cents on the dollar

The findings shed new light on the well-known statistic — reported previously elsewhere — that women in the U.S. earn 77 percent of what men are paid.

“Women actually likely earn much less than 77 percent of what men make,” Seguino says. “Right off the bat, men have more of the high paying jobs, so women are squeezed into lower-paid positions. And female unemployment continues to be about 30 percent higher than men’s, worldwide, so those women are not able to earn their own livelihood.”

Potential gender conflicts

In some nations, manufacturing declines led to male job losses, while women’s employment increased as the service sector expanded. According to Seguino, this can lead to gender conflicts, as men perceive their ability to fulfill their breadwinner role is weakened by women’s rising employment.

“For men to take a lower paying job is a real challenge to their gender identity, and that can create a gender conflict that we rarely discuss,” she says.

This is crucial for policymakers to address, Seguino adds. “We won’t have the political support for the investments and policy changes needed to improve women access to work, if it’s assumed that policy makers are promoting women’s wellbeing by making men worse off.”

Methods

For the study, “Global Trends in Gender Equality,” Seguino measured gender inequality in three key categories: capability (education and health data), livelihoods (employment, job segregation, and other economic indicators), and agency, as measured by parliamentary seats and other forms of political representation.

Key findings

Education:

• Total education years: Women have 91 percent of men’s (up from 82 percent in 1990).

• Secondary school enrollment: Nearly equal.

• Share of nations with female/male education ratios at or above 95 percent (52 percent, up from 33 percent in 1990).

• Educational gains are greatest in the countries with lowest female/male ratios in 1990.

Livelihoods:

• Female employment rate is 70 percent that of men’s (up from 62 percent in 1990).